therealbig3 wrote:A 10 or 11 point game with 5-6 minutes to go is not a blowout. McGrady was the only one doing anything in the 4th, and he was the only reason why it didn't become a blowout earlier. He was pulled with 2:38 left after the Hornets extended the lead to 16 points. He didn't really have an opportunity to stat pad, since I actually think that's a little early to wave the white flag...that's not an insurmountable lead.
A 10+ point margin is pretty much close to over. I know you want to defend McGrady in this case but it was pretty much over. McGrady's scoring wasn't doing anything for his team.
I already said that McGrady didn't play all that great in game 1, and he did struggle with his shot a bit down the stretch. Yes, he struggled in game 2 down the stretch, but the fact that Orlando won the game means that the whole premise of blaming T-Mac's 4th quarter struggles for the Magic losing doesn't make sense, because when he did play poorly in the 4th, it didn't cost them the game. And he ended up with an overall monster game.
It means that he would have clearly lost had Troy Hudson and his other teammates didn't show up. This would also mean that his teammates weren't as bad you were suggesting since they happened to have won him a game.
Meaning, in the games that Orlando lost, he played really well down the stretch in 2 of them.
He played well in game 3. Game 4 didn't matter because it was over. Game 2 he was pretty much carried and didn't play well in and Game 1, he absolutely lost for them.
And sample size is a huge issue here, we can't point to 1 or 2 games in a 4 game series and conclude anything. I'm just pointing out that the idea that McGrady struggled in the "clutch" and that's why his team lost can't really be backed up by anything.
It would appear that you did when you talked about McGrady vs. the Pistons in 2003 when he was dominating them in the first something games but I can't when McGrady struggles? That sounds quite fair.

And again, game 2 skews things. He went 0-5 (with 2 missed 3s) in the 4th and OT, and the scoring margin was within 5 points every time. Which means that in games 1, 3, and 4 (which is what he's being criticized for), he shot 3-7 and 1-2 from 3 (and he got to the line well throughout the series).
So you want me to completely ignore his 0-5 shooting even though it was a really close game? But you want me to count his stats when his team was losing by 10+?
I don't think so, he shot 0-5 and he would have damn well lost that game had his teammates not have his back.
It counts, whether you like it or not.
Also, I'm looking over his game 2 play by play, and T-Mac's playmaking is another big part of his offensive game, and he had 3 assists vs 0 TOs in the 4th quarter and OT, as well as 6 rebounds. If you're going to mention his poor shooting, you should mention that as well...which means he was still creating for his teammates, and that he still wasn't being "carried".
And assists is an incredibly deceiving stat considering how he could have made simple assists that even I or Luke Walton are capable of making. Until you want to highlight what kind of amazing passes/plays he made then I'll be impressed.
Based off of the play by play, Troy Hudson took over by getting to the line a ton and making his FTs unless you somehow want to find a way to credit McGrady for that.
I don't know what the point of this conversation is, 2002 is not peak McGrady.
therealbig3 wrote:And regardless, none of this stuff even really matters. 4th quarter scoring and "clutch" are pretty much irrelevant in the grand scheme of things. ElGee has posted about this in detail before, just look it up.
You are the one responding but it does matter as I already pointed out. I don't know what you're arguing anyways. It is well known that Mcgrady didn't play in the clutch moments of this series.
Mcgrady in 2002 vs. the Hornets was no different than Kobe in 2012 vs. the Thunder.
I am ready to concede that our discussion is pointless though because 2002 McGrady is not peak McGrady and whether he choked or not, is not leading us anywhere. If you tell me he didn't choke, it wouldn't matter because #1 I'm not saying McGrady's peak is not #15 because he was a choker and #2 that wasn't even peak McGrady. If I tell you he didn't choke, it still wouldn't matter because it's not McGrady's peak and you don't believe 1st 3 quarters of scoring are any different than the 4th quarter scoring.
I think we might need to just put it aside unless bastillion wants to come up and put his 2 cents in.